Abstract
A diagnosis of small cell lung cancer (SCLC) today confers essentially the same terrible prognosis that it did 25 years ago, when common use of cisplatin-based chemotherapy began for this disease. In contrast to past decades of research on many other solid tumors, studies of combination chemotherapy using later generation cytotoxics and targeted kinase inhibitors have not had a significant impact on standard care for SCLC. The past few years have seen suggestions of incrementally improved outcomes using standard cytotoxics, including cisplatin-based combination studies of irinotecan and amrubicin by Japanese research consortia. Confirmatory phase III studies of these agents are ongoing in the United States. Antiangiogenic strategies are also of primary interest and are in late-phase testing. Several novel therapeutics, including high-potency small molecule inhibitors of Bcl-2 and the Hedgehog signaling pathway, and a recently discovered replication-competent picornavirus, have shown remarkable activity against SCLC in preclinical models and are currently in simultaneous phase I clinical development. Novel therapeutic approaches based on advances in understanding of the biology of SCLC have the potential to radically change the outlook for patients with this disease. © Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network 2008.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Rudin, C. M., Hann, C. L., Peacock, C. D., & Watkins, D. N. (2008). Novel systemic therapies for small cell lung cancer. JNCCN Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network. Jones and Bartlett Publishers. https://doi.org/10.6004/jnccn.2008.0026
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.